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FCC Exceeded Authority in Requiring Broadcasters to Check Sponsors Against Government's Foreign Agent Lists
The D.C. Circuit so held, concluding that the FCC regulation exceeded its powers under the federal Communications Act.
From today's D.C. Circuit decision in Nat'l Ass'n of Broadcasters v. FCC, written by Judge Justin Walker and joined by Judges Cornelia Pillard and Raymond Randolph:
In October 1964, Barry Goldwater's supporters sponsored thirty minutes of television time for an actor named Ronald Reagan to make a closing argument for Goldwater's struggling campaign. The speech—which failed to save Goldwater but launched Reagan on a path to the White House—was introduced with a stock announcement:
The following pre-recorded political program is sponsored by TV for Goldwater-Miller on behalf of Barry Goldwater, Republican candidate for President of the United States.
Today, similar announcements for sponsored radio broadcasts are required by the Communications Act of 1934. To make that announcement, a broadcaster must ask its employees and sponsors for information necessary to determine a sponsor's identity.
Recently, the FCC began to require more. It issued an order mandating that radio broadcasters check two federal sources to verify a sponsor's identity.
Because the FCC has no authority to impose that verification requirement, we vacate that facet of its order….
Since 1927, Congress has forbidden the operation of a radio station without a federal license. It tasked the Federal Radio Commission, now called the Federal Communications Commission, with granting those licenses and administering the obligations that come with them.
Section 317(a) of the Communications Act imposes one such obligation. It requires broadcasters to announce who "paid for or furnished" a sponsored program at the time of the program. To ensure that the broadcaster can make that identification, § 317(c) imposes an additional duty:
[A broadcaster] shall exercise reasonable diligence to obtain from its employees, and from other persons with whom it deals directly in connection with any program or program matter [i.e., the sponsors] for broadcast, information to enable such licensee to make the announcement required by this section….
Finally, Congress required the FCC to "prescribe appropriate rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of" § 317.
Recently, the FCC has raised concerns that the Chinese and Russian governments have been secretly leasing airtime to broadcast propaganda on American radio. To address that problem, the FCC issued an order called "In the Matter of Sponsorship Identification Requirements for Foreign Government-Provided Programming." It requires broadcasters to undertake a five-step process whenever they lease airtime to a sponsor:
1) Tell the sponsor about the § 317 disclosure requirement;
2) Ask the sponsor whether it is a foreign governmental entity or an agent of one;
3) Ask the sponsor whether anyone further back in the production or distribution chain is a foreign governmental entity or an agent of one;
4) Independently confirm the sponsor's status, at both the time of the lease and the time of any renewal, by checking the Department of Justice's Foreign Agents Registration Act website and the FCC's U.S.-based foreign media outlets reports; and
5) Document those inquiries and investigations.
The National Association of Broadcasters objected to step four (the verification requirement) and petitioned for review….
An agency must identify statutory authority for any action it takes. Here, the FCC has not done so. Rather, it has decreed a duty that the statute does not require and that the statute does not empower the FCC to impose.
Remember the only obligation that § 317(c) places on a broadcaster: It must "exercise reasonable diligence to obtain from its employees, and from other persons with whom it deals directly … information to enable [the broadcaster] to make the announcement required by this section."
In that sentence, the "to obtain" clause means broadcasters do not need to exercise diligence in general. And the two "from" clauses mean broadcasters do not need to make a diligent effort to obtain the information from any possible source. They simply need to be diligent in their efforts "to obtain" the necessary information "from" employees and sponsors. Nothing more.
The FCC's verification requirement ignores the limits that the statute places on broadcasters' narrow duty of inquiry. It instead tells a broadcaster to seek information from two federal sources in addition to the two sources that the statute prescribes. That is not the law that Congress wrote.
The FCC offers two arguments against that interpretation.
First, it says that verifying information's accuracy is part of making a reasonably diligent effort to obtain that information from a source. But § 317(c) imposes a duty of inquiry, not a duty of investigation. Loveday v. FCC (D.C. Cir. 1983) (Section 317(c) "is satisfied by appropriate inquiries made by the station to the party that pays it for the broadcast"). It does not make broadcasters responsible for the truth of the information they obtain.
Second, the FCC argues that even if § 317(c) does not affirmatively authorize it to require searches of the federal sources, it can require the searches as part of its general authority to "prescribe appropriate rules and regulations to carry out the provisions" of § 317. A generic grant of rulemaking authority to fill gaps, however, does not allow the FCC to alter the specific choices Congress made. Instead, the FCC must abide "not only by the ultimate purposes Congress has selected, but by the means it has deemed appropriate, and prescribed, for the pursuit of those purposes."
Here, Congress chose the means for broadcasters to obtain the information necessary to announce who paid for programming: Ask employees and sponsors. The FCC cannot alter Congress's choice.
Thanks to Spencer Gibbs for the pointer.
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Good. Make Congress do its own dirty work instead of letting a regulation body presume a great grandchild of control from a bubblegum machine law from 1902.
Let's see the law get into forcing Hollywood to put disclaimers on their products, "This movie has been edited to be acceptable to censors in a dictatorship, who want us to censor what you see, too, or they will cut off their lucrative market."
I don’t see this.
The rule seems to be a straightforward implementation of the statutory mandate to take “reasonable” steps to verify a sponsor’s identity. “Reasonable” is exactly the sort of vague standard susceptible to being clarified by more specific rules, the rules here were directly related to the statutory standard (that is, they clarified what sorts of steps would be reasonable), and the agency had clear rule-making authority.
So this strikes me as a streightforward case for Chevron deference. There’s no major question, it’s just a minor detail. “Reasonable” is an ambiguous term. And the rule is directly related to the statutory mandate and simply clarifies the ambiguity, the sort of thing rules are properly supposed to do.
The opinion makes much over saying “an inquiry isn’t an investigation.” But I think that’s splitting hairs.
I would say that the rule falls within the “other persons” portion of the statute. Radio stations deal with the federal government directly. The rule doesn’t call for an extrnsive investigation, just a look-up.
A Massachusetts statute requires car license plates to be legible, but specifically states "plates ... shall not be obscured in any manner by the installation of any device obscuring said numbers". The executive branch issued a regulation prohibiting license plate covers. Courts ruled the regulation invalid. While the executive had been delegated power to regulate motor vehicle equipment, the legislature had already prescribed the exact standard to be used. A device not obscuring the numbers was legal.